California, we are so happy to have you join us. It’s hardly a "from sea to shining sea moment" of marriage equality, but now Massachusetts and California have shown the country that equal marriage is fundamental to freedom and liberty. The threats to the marriage equality movement in California will probably continue, just as they have in Massachusetts. But oh, for this moment, our country feels like a "sweet land of liberty." All these patriotic refrains keep running through my head!

Be prepared to hear that "the end of civilization is coming." That’s the least of the hateful rhetoric that will come your way. Take heart. We have heard it all in Massachusetts. Now four and a half years after the Goodridge decision granting us marriage equality, we are still standing as we struggle to hold on to our rights and fight for the same rights for others.

While we are one-sixth the size of your population, our roots are in feistiness, rebellion, and a commitment to liberty and justice for all. Our combined populations approach 43 million--15% of the US population. How long will it seem fair to the other 239 million to withhold this civil right? You can look to our path-breaking ways and we gladly welcome your guidance. We are so happy to have you as allies.

On May 17, 2008, we mark four years of marriage equality. All of the dire predictions of "the sky is falling" ilk have proved to be nothing more than the rhetorical rantings of religious conservatives on a fear mongering mission.

Flashback to 2004, Stanley Kurtz of the Hoover Institution in
California, a conservative think tank, claimed that he had the
statistics to
show that the demise of heterosexual marriage was well underway in
Scandinavia because of the granting of "marriage-like" (read, "separate
but equal") gay relationship rights beginning with Denmark in 1989,
Norway in 1993, Sweden in 1994, and Iceland in 1996. He predicted, "By
the time we see the effects of gay marriage in America, it will be too
late to do anything about it."

Governor Mitt Romney, revving up his presidential engines, predicted
that Massachusetts would become "the Las Vegas of gay marriage."

James Dobson of Focus on the Family declared that Massachusetts was
issuing "death certificates for the institution of marriage."

You'll hear the same. Stay the course.

Flash forward to 2008, Kurtz's skewed interpretation of statistics
has been soundly refuted by scholars like M.V. Lee Badgett who examined Kurtz’s
Scandinavian "data" and showed that "divorce rates have not risen
since the passage of partnership laws, and marriage rates have remained
stable or actually increased." (Badgett also wrote a compelling brief
in support of California's marriage case.) But reason and facts never
stop a religious conservative like Kurtz from repeating inaccuracies
that help mobilize anti-marriage equality sentiment. In a 2006 article he cops to his strategy. "Gay marriage undermines marriage... okay, I
admit it. I'm a cranky, stick-in-the-mud conservative who keeps making
the same tired old point." And an incorrect point, I might add.

Romney had his stint on the national stage where his own Vegas style
flim-flam and flip-flop showmanship was soundly rejected by the
American electorate. Back in our midst, he is trying to get John
McCain's attention.

Dobson's dire warnings about gay marriage persist. A key component of Focus on the
Family's financial and psychological empire is attacking LGBT people
and our marriages in particular. Daniel Karslake’s brilliant 2007 film,
For the Bible tells Me So, lays bare
the hypocrisy of Dobson and his cohort of religious conservatives. As
they rake in millions of dollars each year, they cite a couple of
Biblical passages that they claim demonstrate that homosexuality is
wrong. Meanwhile they ignore repeated passages admonishing all of us
to give our money to the poor. Mega-millionaire preachers do not do the
work of Jesus. But the Bible tells them that they are righteous and we
are not. Karslake’s film challenges the empire.

Over 10,000 same-sex marriages in Massachusetts also present a
challenge. We have had a "reality" show running here. Our marriages are
succeeding. Even though we do not have the federal benefits that are
critical for all families, LGBT families in 2008 are more secure
socially, psychologically, and financially. Massachusetts still has the
lowest divorce rate in the country and heterosexual marriage statistics
have not plummeted.

Now California's same-sex couples will also enjoy the protections of
marriage. Together we can show the other 85% of the US that equality is
the American way.

Today when I spoke with Lisa Berg of Valencia, California, she had
just gotten off the phone after asking her partner Rosanne Schembri, "Will you marry me?" Rosanne's reply was, "Again?" You see, they have
been together for 29 years. In 1979 they had a Holy Union in Los
Angeles. In 2001 they had a civil union in Vermont. In 2005, they had a
domestic partnership in California. In 2006, they married in Toronto.
Now they will marry in California. Again. This time it's for real. And
rest assured, the sky will not fall.

California, we are so happy to have you join us. It’s hardly a "from sea to shining sea moment" of marriage equality, but now Massachusetts and California have shown the country that equal marriage is fundamental to freedom and liberty. The threats to the marriage equality movement in California will probably continue, just as they have in Massachusetts. But oh, for this moment, our country feels like a "sweet land of liberty." All these patriotic refrains keep running through my head!

Be prepared to hear that "the end of civilization is coming." That’s the least of the hateful rhetoric that will come your way. Take heart. We have heard it all in Massachusetts. Now four and a half years after the Goodridge decision granting us marriage equality, we are still standing as we struggle to hold on to our rights and fight for the same rights for others.

While we are one-sixth the size of your population, our roots are in feistiness, rebellion, and a commitment to liberty and justice for all. Our combined populations approach 43 million--15% of the US population. How long will it seem fair to the other 239 million to withhold this civil right? You can look to our path-breaking ways and we gladly welcome your guidance. We are so happy to have you as allies.

On May 17, 2008, we mark four years of marriage equality. All of the dire predictions of "the sky is falling" ilk have proved to be nothing more than the rhetorical rantings of religious conservatives on a fear mongering mission.